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Key Review Formulas

The document contains formulas and definitions for: 1) Quadratic formula, square of a sum, geometric and arithmetic series formulas, limits, derivatives, integrals, and integration techniques like substitution and integration by parts. 2) It defines key concepts like the derivative as the limit of the difference quotient, basic differentiation rules, antiderivatives of common functions, and L'Hopital's rule for evaluating limits of indeterminate forms. 3) The document provides the formulas for calculating sums of series, finding derivatives and integrals using various techniques, and evaluating limits of functions.

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Rema Nov
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
50 views

Key Review Formulas

The document contains formulas and definitions for: 1) Quadratic formula, square of a sum, geometric and arithmetic series formulas, limits, derivatives, integrals, and integration techniques like substitution and integration by parts. 2) It defines key concepts like the derivative as the limit of the difference quotient, basic differentiation rules, antiderivatives of common functions, and L'Hopital's rule for evaluating limits of indeterminate forms. 3) The document provides the formulas for calculating sums of series, finding derivatives and integrals using various techniques, and evaluating limits of functions.

Uploaded by

Rema Nov
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Quadratic Formula

Given: ax 2  bx  c  0
 b  b 2  4ac
Solve for x: x 
2a

Square of a Sum
( a  b) 2  a 2  2ab  b 2 and
(a  b  c) 2  a  b  c  2ab  2bc  2ac

Series Formulas

Geometric Series: a, ar, ar2, ar3, …  a + ar + ar2+ ar3 + …

Sum of first n terms (note: First n terms starts at r0 and goes to rn-1)
1 rn
a + ar + ar2+ ar3 + … + arn-1= a(1 + r + r2+ r3 + … + rn-1)= a 
1 r
Infinite Convergent Series (-1 < r < 1)
1
a + ar + ar2+ ar3 + … = a(1 + r + r2+ r3 + …)= a 
1 r
Arithmetic Series: a, a+d, a+2d, a+3d3, …  a + (a+d) + (a+2d) + (a+3d) + …

Sum of first n terms (note: First n terms starts at 0d and goes to (n-1)d)
n( n  1)
a + (a+d) + (a+2d) + (a+3d) + … + (a+(n-1)d) = na  d 
2
Special Case for first n integers
n( n  1)
1+2+3+…+n=
2
Definition of ea

an

n  0 n!
 ea

Also – dividing both sides by ea gives



an
 e a
n 0 n!
 1 (This is the pdf for the Poisson distribution)
Limit Theorems: Let n be a positive integer, k be a constant, and f and g be functions
which have limits at c then:
lim k  k
x c

lim x  c
x c

lim kf ( x)  k lim f ( x)
xc xc

lim f ( x)  g ( x)  lim f ( x)  lim g ( x)


x c x c x c

lim f ( x)  g ( x)  lim f ( x)  lim g ( x)


x c x c x c

lim f ( x)  g ( x)  lim f ( x)  lim g ( x)


x c x c x c

lim f ( x)  g ( x)  lim f ( x)  lim g ( x) Provided lim g ( x)  0

 
x c x c x c x c

lim f ( x)  lim f ( x)


n n
x c x c

lim n f ( x)  n lim f ( x) Provided lim f ( x)  0 when n is even


x c x c x c

Substitution Theorem: if f is a polynomial or rational function, and if rational


denominator at c ≠ 0
lim f ( x)  f (c )
x c
Derivative
 f (c  h)  f (c ) 
f ' (c)  lim  Provided this limit exists
h0
 h 
Alternate Form
 f ( x )  f (c ) 
f ' (c)  lim  
x c
 xc 

Rules of Differentiation
f (x ) f ' ( x)
c (a constant) 0
Power Rule cx n  n    cnx n 1
g ( x)  h( x ) g ' ( x)  h' ( x)

Product Rule g ( x)  h( x ) g ' ( x)  h( x)  g ( x)  h' ( x)


u ( x )v ( x ) w( x ) u ' vw  uv' w  uvw'

g ( x) h( x ) g ' ( x )  g ( x ) h' ( x )
Quotient Rule
h( x )  h( x ) 2
Chain Rule g (h ( x )) g ' ( h( x ))  h' ( x )

e g ( x) g ' ( x)  e g ( x )
g ' ( x)
ln( g ( x ))
g ( x)
a x  a  0 a x ln(a )

ex ex
1
ln x
x
1
log b x
x  ln(b)
sin x cos x
cos x  sin x

 cf ( x)   cf (x)

BPP Power Rule   f ( x)  


p
p  f ( x) 
p 1
 f ( x)

L’Hopital’s Rule

If lim f ( x)  0 & lim g ( x)  0 or lim f ( x)   & lim g ( x)  


x c x c x c x c
Then
 f ( x)   f ( x)  g ' ( x)  0
lim 
x c g ( x)   lim 
x c g ( x ) 
Provided lim
x c
   
Note: Can be applied multiple times.

Antiderivatives (Integrals) of Some Frequently Used Functions


f (x )  f ( x) dx

g ( x)  h( x )  g ( x)dx   h( x)dx  c
x n 1
x n  n  1 c
n 1
1
ln( x )  c
x
ex ex  c
ax
a x  a  0 c
ln a
xe ax e ax
xe ax  2 c
a a
1 1  ax 1
e  ax or e or ax
e ax a ae
sin x  cos x  c
cos x sin x  c
Additional integration rules:
 n!
For integer n  0 and real number c  0 0
x n e cx dx 
c n 1
Integration by Substitution
To find ∫f(x)dx substitute u=g(x), g being differentiable then du =g′(x)dx then we
can rewrite ∫f(x)dx as an integral with respect to the variable u. So if this changes
f(x)dx to h(u)du and H is the antiderivative of h, then
 f ( x)dx   h(u )du  H (u )  c  H ( g ( x))  c
Example: Find ∫(x3-1)4/3x2dx – Substitue u= x3-1, so that du=3x2dx or ⅓du= x2dx
7 7
1 u 3 1 3
now the integral can be written as ∫u ∙⅓du = ⅓∫u du =  4/3
 u ( c) now
4/3

3 73 7
substitute back the u= x3-1 gives the final result ∫(x3-1)4/3x2dx = 1/7(x3-1)7/3(+c)

Integration by Parts
If you have an integral of the form  f ( x )  g ( x ) dx then do integration by parts

 f ( x)  g ( x)dx  f ( x ) g ( x)   f ( x )  g ( x) dx

Use when  f ( x )  g ( x ) dx is easier than  f ( x)  g ( x)dx


For a definite integral
f ( x)  g ( x )dx   f ( x) g ( x ) a   f ( x)  g ( x) dx
b b

b
a a

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